Where will the coastal year-rounders live?

Stonington waterfront in1915

Aerial view of fancy summer resort town Camden, Maine, from the harbor

—Photo by King of Hearts

Adapted from Robert Whitcomb’s “Digital Diary,’’ in GoLocal24.com

‘Many coastal communities in New England face severe housing shortages for year-round residents of modest means. Around here, Nantucket,  Martha’s Vineyard and Block Island are infamous for this problem.

Consider Stonington, Maine, on Deer Isle. There, 80 percent of its shorefront is now owned by non-residents (mostly summer people), as are 56 percent of that fishing (mostly lobsters) port’s downtown properties, according to a report in the Portland Press Herald

The usually affluent summer folks bid up real estate prices to levels unaffordable to most year-rounders.

So where will the carpenters, yard-work people, plumbers, electricians and  schoolteachers live? Perhaps some elderly summer people will leave their summer McMansions to towns to be converted into affordable housing. Just joking. But something must be done if these towns are going to have enough of the locals who make communities viable for year-round and  summer people. That includes zoning changes and/or having states subsidize the construction of new housing in some places.

Hit this link.

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